Author: Miguel Rodriguez

Local film festival scares up a respectable following. Last year saw the inception of San Diego’s first film festival dedicated to macabre cinema and art. The response was so overwhelmingly positive that a second year was a certainty. On November…

One of the heralds of the science fiction-peppered horror films that peppered the 1950s. The inherent fear these films were exploiting was the paranoia of an outside influence on America by a sinister foreign entity—the same paranoid that would fuel the notorious Red Scare.

That’s right, today’s entry is all about The Invisible Man. With the success of Dracula and Frankenstein in 1931, Universal Studios was looking for the next big screen horror villain to fill the theater seats with thrill seekers.

Director Tobe Hooper was inspired by both a hardware store and a famous serial killer when he wrote what would become The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Filmed on a shoestring budget under an unforgiving Texas sun that overexposed most of the film, the end product is a film with a tone that looks and feels so raw and real that it has caused nightmares for nearly four decades now.